Former President of the Nigeria Labour Congress, NLC, Adams Oshiomhole, has warned Nigerian workers that wages alone cannot guarantee them a decent life.
The former governor of Edo State, said this in his message to commemorate the 40th anniversary celebration of NLC.
He noted that aside the fight for new minimum wage, workers should also run for elective positions in order to positively impact on the lives of the people.
His statement in full: “Contrary to my earlier thinking when I was much younger that what the movement needed was to perfect the act of persuasion and negotiation and where that did work, to militantly challenge private capital and even the state to ensure that we had a living wage and all those benefits, looking back I realized that what really determine the quality of life is not so much the amount of money that is transferred to you.
“What really determine the overall quality of life of citizens is about all the other facilities available beyond the world of works.
“Your wages will not transform to a decent life if the health sector is hopeless, lecturers spend more time on strike than in the classroom and education is privatized and the ladder for upward mobility is destroyed.
“I have come to the conclusion that those who are in power will never govern according to your own values. The position they take or the policy choices they make are not the results of errors of judgment. They are conscious decisions taken in order to ensure that a particular class gets more.
“So, government and governance is a basic act which decides who earns what and gets what. Placards can moderate and force them to go back and restrategise.
“But placards will not change their value system, rather, they will go back and strategies on how best to continue to dominate and use the instrument of state to enrich the rich. Many of our politicians simply lack the capacity to engage the people which explain why rigging has continued to prosper.
“A system can only continue to flourish only to the extent that those who are negatively affected by that system chose to console it.
“The day men and women rise in unison to challenge an oppressive order that will be the beginning of the end of that order. I also know that there will be no day when men and women who are oppressed will agree to fight against oppression.
“If it is one man that believes that there should be a fight, let him stand up and be counted because as he moves on, somebody else might join and over time, a movement is formed.
“The challenges of leadership are to inspire civil confidence that things are possible. I say to people that if as a factory worker who had worked in the most subordinated position could be a governor, those of you who have better background could be president of this country. We should not pursue only as an end in itself.”
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